Fungos & Fastballs: Baseball History & Trivia
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] A Cubs legend doesn’t have to be loud to be unforgettable, and Ryne Sandberg is the proof. We sit down with longtime friend and die-hard Cubs fan James Maumus to trace how a kid in New Orleans became devoted to Chicago baseball thanks to cable TV, WGN superstation broadcasts, and the simple magic of day games at Wrigley Field. The result is part baseball history, part fan memory, and a clear case for why Sandberg’s steady, team-first style still resonates. We dig into Sandberg’s path from the Philadelphia Phillies to the Cubs, the infield that helped define early 1980s Chicago, and what it means to win nine straight Gold Gloves as a second baseman. From there we relive the electric 1984 season and the moment that put Sandberg on the national map: June 23, 1984, the “Sandberg Game,” when he took Hall of Fame closer Bruce Sutter deep twice in the biggest spots, with Harry Caray’s call turning it into Cubs folklore. The conversation also follows the full arc: playoff heartbreak, Sandberg’s 1990 power peak, the emotional toll of the 1994 MLB strike, and how fans reconnect to the sport. We close with Cubs retired numbers trivia, Sandberg’s Cooperstown values, the statue outside Wrigley, and the weight of his later battle with metastatic prostate cancer, plus one of the most human fan stories you’ll hear all week. If you care about the Chicago Cubs, baseball history, or what real leadership looks like between the lines, hit play, then subscribe, share the episode with a Cubs fan, and leave us a review. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com
30 episodios
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